The Farming Silo That Could Feed the World From Places Nothing Grows

Farming is running out of land. The solution may not be better fields—but abandoning fields entirely and growing vertically, inside the earth.

By Futurist Thomas Frey

Agriculture has a geography problem.

The places where food grows best — flat, fertile, temperate, well-watered — are also the places where people want to live, build cities, and expand infrastructure. As the global population pushes toward ten billion, the competition between agriculture and development for the same arable land is intensifying in ways that traditional farming, no matter how optimized, cannot resolve. We are running out of the right kind of ground.

The idea I want to explore today reframes the question entirely. Instead of asking how to farm better on the land we have, it asks: what if we stopped thinking about land as the primary surface for agriculture altogether?

What if the growing surface was the wall of a cylinder, descending into the earth?

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Future Farm: a sunless, rainless room indoors

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Gertjan Meeuws of PlantLab

Farming is moving indoors, where the sun never shines, where rainfall is irrelevant and where the climate is always right.

The perfect crop field could be inside a windowless building with meticulously controlled light, temperature, humidity, air quality and nutrition. It could be in a New York high-rise, a Siberian bunker, or a sprawling complex in the Saudi desert. (w/video & pics)

Continue reading… “Future Farm: a sunless, rainless room indoors”